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Germany Blocks Turkey’s E.U. Accession Talks

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(LUXEMBOURG) — Germany has blocked the next step in the European Union‘s membership talks with Turkey over Ankara’s crackdown on anti-government protests, a diplomat from an EU nation said Thursday. Berlin blocked the decision to open a new chapter in the long-running accession talks because “there are still open questions,” said the diplomat. The decision comes as a blow to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan‘s Turkish government, which faces increasing international scrutiny over its crackdown on several weeks of protests in Istanbul and other cities. Pushing ahead with the EU accession talks as scheduled next week would have required unanimous approval at a meeting of top diplomats representing the EU’s 27 member nations in Brussels on Thursday. But Germany and another nation expressed reservations and blocked the move, the diplomat said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the closed-door meeting publicly. The diplomat declined to name the second nation. Human rights groups have said that the protests in Turkey have left more than 5,000 people injured and more than 3,000 were detained, then released. The anti-government demonstrations were sparked by a police crackdown on environmental activists in Istanbul on May 31, but also criticized what some regard as Erdogan’s authoritarian style of leadership. German Chancellor Angela Merkel last week said she was “appalled” to see the Turkish security forces’ “overly harsh” crackdown on the protests. NATO-member Turkey began EU accession negotiations in 2005, but has made little progress because of a dispute with Cyprus, an EU member, and opposition among some in Europe to admitting a populous Muslim nation into the bloc. The session of EU talks to open next week was to focus on regional policies, not Turkey’s protests. But some officials expressed concern that such talks could appear to endorse the crackdown on the demonstrations. “I regret that the Turkish government did not react with dialogue and de-escalation to the protests but with an aggravation in rhetoric and actions,” German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle said in an interview published late week. “It is

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